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bartman
13-07-2011, 01:18 PM
Here is a great link to the virtual tour of the cockpit of SS Discovery:
http://360vr.com/2011/06/22-discovery-flight-deck-opf_6236/index.html
Enjoy figuring out which button makes it all go!
Bartman

iceman
13-07-2011, 01:23 PM
That's amazing!

Liz
13-07-2011, 01:29 PM
goodness gracious!! :eyepop:

stephenb
13-07-2011, 01:30 PM
Incredible!

Where would NASA be without sticky Velco dots.

bartman
13-07-2011, 01:43 PM
Compared to SOFIA 747 (http://www.360cities.net/image/747-cockpit-of-nasa-sofia-plane-california#-729.19,19.26,70.0) or A380 (http://www.gillesvidal.com/blogpano/cockpit1.htm)......mmmmm
The Shuttle still looks very daunting.......
Bartman

SkyViking
13-07-2011, 01:52 PM
Truly spectacular. Thanks for the link!

Ric
13-07-2011, 02:20 PM
Blimey that's awesome.

You would probably need a degree in everything just to fly it.

mswhin63
13-07-2011, 03:07 PM
Great link, i can see it is showing it's age, notice the laptop on top of what could have been the original computer module location that has a bunch of plugged up holes.

gary
13-07-2011, 03:18 PM
Hi Bart,

Thanks for the great link.

Many members of this forum will be old enough to remember seeing
the Stanley Kubrick classic "2001: A Space Odyssey" when it first screened
forty-three years ago in 1968.

It is interesting to compare the interiors of the Shuttle cockpit, circa 2011,
with the interior of the Orion Pan-Am Clipper shuttle, which was created for the
movie during its production circa 1966-1968.

See http://www.flickr.com/photos/blile59/4911288507/
See http://www.flickr.com/photos/blile59/4911288653/in/photostream/

Essentially the movie was, at the time, depicting how things might look in
the future and it is remarkable how the combined visions of Kubrick,
his special effects team, set designers, Arthur C. Clarke and the direction
they sort from aerospace and computer industry consultants enabled them to provide
a design that is remarkably similar, if not even more elegant, than what
actually exists today in the early parts of the 21st century.

Keep in mind that, at the time the movie is made, we have not yet been to the
Moon and computers are mainly large mainframes that occupy entire rooms,
with information fed into them by teletypes or punch cards. Evans & Sutherland (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evans_%26_Sutherland),
the pioneers of computer graphics, does not even begin operations until
the same year the movie is already on the screen. So computer graphics,
let alone on colored monitors, is nearly non-existent and Kubrick employed
animators to create by hand what is designed to appear to be computer graphics
on the glass cockpit displays.

So when we compare the Orion Clipper in the movie to the Space Shuttle
today, it is interesting to reflect on how art can imitate life and how life can
imitate art.

I must admit though, like many readers who first saw that movie on the big screen
all those years ago, a little disappointed that we are still unable to take that
trip to the orbiting Hilton Hotel and from there onto the Moon. :lol:

When the Shuttle Atlantis launched last week, something like a million
people turned out to watch it at Cape Canaveral and probably millions more
around the world would have watched it either live or on the evening news.
It is still exciting and dramatic stuff.

Yet in the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, what does Dr. Heywood Floyd (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heywood_R._Floyd),
the fictional lone passenger aboard the Pan Am Orion Clipper do? Does he
stay glued to the window looking out and shouting "Wowee!"? Does he
grab his camera and shoot away at the beautiful vision of Earth below?
No, he does what most passengers do on a long intercontinental 747 flight today -
he sleeps. :lol: So what Kubrick was saying was that in the future, space travel
would become so routine that it would, well, be almost boring. So it seems we still
have a long way to go. :)

Thanks again for that great link. :thumbsup:

M54
13-07-2011, 03:34 PM
I think it's more that they inspire each other rather than imitate, don't you think?:)

Thanks Bart, that's truly amazing. But those seats don't look too comfortable, do they.:P

bartman
13-07-2011, 03:58 PM
I'm wondering what the slit in the co pilots seat is for?(:P;))

Thanks for your Links too Gary!!!!
And thank you for reminding me of all of the facts you have put up in your post:thumbsup:
I have it on bluray and love watching it. Never actually thought it was made one year before I was born and the first person on the moon!
On the subject of "life imitates art", William Shatner made a documentary in regards to what influences Star Trek had/has made on modern society.
Its called ( aptly) "How William Shatner Changed the World" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGyQVO62QM0).
The link is just a two min vid but I'm sure you can find the full video in your local Video Store, I did....

Cheers once again Gary.
Bartman

Suzy
13-07-2011, 04:48 PM
Note to self: do not click on those links and go round and round and round and round and round many many many times over in those cockpits in those links after just eating. I felt soooooo sick. :( Not hard, I get car sick on the first 5 mins of a journey unless I look straight ahead. :screwy: :lol:

Thanks for the links Bart, it was an eye opener :eyepop:.
I'll have to show hubby tonight. ;)


Gary, that was an incredibly interesting and thought provoking post- thank you. :thanx:

Kevnool
13-07-2011, 05:04 PM
I could have fun in there pressing all them buttons turning them knobs.

Seat looks to unconfortable for me.

Who will be there highest bidder for that piece of history.

Great link

Cheers Kev.

Jen
13-07-2011, 08:00 PM
:eyepop:woah look at all those buttons CAN I PLAY? :eyepop: thanks for the link even though i am now all dizzy :lol:

GrahamL
18-07-2011, 09:10 PM
look at all the red ones your probably not suposed to touch :thumbsup: